A Coach Reviews The Lawyer's Guide to Professional Coaching

At long last, the ABA has published a book about coaching for lawyers. As an attorney coach for almost a decade, I understand that many lawyers don’t even know that the option of coaching for their profession exists, let alone understand how coaches can help their careers. The publishing of this book by the ABA should enhance the credibility and popularity of lawyer coaching. Continue reading this post at www.lawyerist.com Read More

When Networking, Confidence and Enthusiasm Are Essential

“Eighty percent of success is showing up.” Usually I agree with Woody Allen, who is famous for (among other things) making this remark. But when it comes to networking for purposes of business development, I’ll have to differ from the well-known filmmaker. Continue reading post at www.lawyerist.com Read More

When is a Lawyer Like a Barber?

When it gets right down to it, what lawyers do is all about clients. Those wonderful, awful, charming, annoying, challenging and gratifying people who actually pay you to do your work. So we are declaring it “This Business of Clients” week here at Attorney at Work. You will receive some new and some of our best encore posts this week, designed to give you and your desk-side manner a quick refocus. Good for you. Good for them. First up? Roy Ginsburg and the guy who cuts his hair. Continue reading this post on attorneyatwork.com Read More

Work the Room When Speaking in Public

You’re a lawyer who’s accepted an invitation to speak and the speech is ready to go. It’s now show time. Are you are ready to reap the benefits? The primary benefit of any speaking engagement is not the speech itself. Rather, it is the opportunity to interact in person with members of a select audience of clients, potential clients and referral sources. Continue reading this post at www.lawyerist.com Read More

Cold Calls Have Chilling Effect On Many Lawyers

Telephone calls to prospective clients or employers can be “cold,” where the person is not expecting your call. They can also be “warm,” where the prospective client knows something about you and is expecting your call. When coaching lawyers, I am often asked about the effectiveness of cold calling. Lawyers who want to develop more business wonder if this highly popularized sales technique might work for them. Lawyers who are looking for jobs wonder if cold calls ever generate warm informational interviews. Almost always, I counsel my clients to turn a cold shoulder on cold calling. The telephone is a “cold” medium The goal of cold calling is to plant a tiny seed that can grow into a relationship — so that the called person will think of you when they have work to refer out or when they hear of a job opportunity. Even if the person being called actually answers the phone, I don’t see a relationship being launched very often using this impersonal medium. Connecting a face with a name makes it more likely that you will be remembered. Don’t use a telephone call to make your “pitch.” Instead, use it to try to arrange a face-to-face meeting. The chances of someone picking up the phone on a cold call are slim to none. Usually, your call is directed to voice mail. Ideally, you have a succinct and interesting message to leave. Even so, what are the chances that a busy person will listen to the complete message and then return a cold call of this nature? If they do, chances are slim that you in turn will be available to take the call. Let’s assume that you get lucky and your targeted contact actually answers the phone. How ready is this person to listen – right at this moment and exactly about this subject? “Cold” interruptions can be irritating. Plus, it takes the listener time to switch gears from what they were doing when interrupted to what you are saying in your phone call. By the time the person is paying attention, the first 30 seconds of your carefully crafted call have already flown by. Email plus face-to-face is a “warm” medium Time devoted to cold calling could be better spent on setting up and attending face-to-face meetings. By agreeing to the meeting, a person has already expressed a willingness to help you out. Plus, they know what you want and are focused from the start. I fully understand that persuading someone to meet with you is easier said than done – but it is still much more effective than cold calling. Let us say that you have 20 potential contact names and five hours of time to spend on your business development or job networking efforts. If you cold call, you might get through to three or four individuals; if you’re lucky, one of them might help you. Without ever seeing your face, it is unlikely the person will remember you. If you email first with a little information about who you are and why you would like to meet, you might end up with some “ignores” (just like voice mail), but with just a ten percent “hit” rate you are likely to end up meeting face-to-face with two individuals who have already been warmed up and expressed a willingness to help you. One final reason to give cold calling the cold shoulder is that just about everyone hates doing it. As I tell my attorney coaching clients, what is hated rarely gets done well – or at all. Most of my clients find it much more comfortable to email first, then meet in person with a few select individuals who understand the agenda. Read More

Asking For The Business: IMHO, Rarely Ethical or Effective

In a previous post dealing with the ethical traps in networking, I discussed how “asking for business” can run afoul of the ABA Rules of Professional Conduct. In this post, I want to discuss how “asking for business” can be ineffective as well as a business development tactic. Continue reading post on solopracticeuniversity.com Read More

Networking Can Be An Ethical Landmine. Be Careful.

Done right, networking is essential for growth; Done wrong, networking can be unethical For solo lawyers in almost all practice areas, success depends on the relationships you develop through personal networking. Many of you already know that and are actively networking. What you may not know is that a lawyer’s networking activities are governed by ethics rules. While my goal is clearly not to inhibit your networking efforts or put a damper on your enthusiasm for interaction with potential clients or referrers of clients, I do want to point out some of the ethics rules so you will be more aware of these tripwires that land unsuspecting lawyers in hot water. Continue reading this post on solopracticeuniversity.com Read More

Say "Thank You" to Stand Out

I always emphasize the importance of remaining optimistic when coaching lawyers on the topic of job hunting. And, lawyers being lawyers, I always need to provide some reason why they should remain upbeat. I have a simple answer: The job market is actually much less competitive than you think when you consider that so many other job-seekers make fundamental mistakes. Continue reading this post on attorneyatwork.com Read More

ABA rules: No major ethics overhaul needed To address web marketing

In a draft proposal issued last month, the ABA Commission on Ethics 20/20 recommended no new restrictions relating to online marketing. The Commission did offer some useful guidance on how to interpret some web-based marketing tools within the context of existing ethics rules – guidance that I intend to pass along to the solo and small-firm lawyers that I coach. Continue reading this post on myshingle.com Read More

Marketing of Legal Services to an Immigrant Population: A Lawyer Coach Answers the Question, "Does It Work?"

Whenever asked by attendees at one of my marketing CLEs or by my lawyer coaching clients whether they should market their services differently because of what they perceive as “unique circumstances,” I am always somewhat amused. Continue reading this post on minncle.org Read More